A statement on the FFF's website said a letter would be sent to UEFA, European football's governing body, before March 9 to rubber-stamp the bid.

"The FFF is definitely a candidate. It is a candidate to win," read the statement.

"The organisation of Euro 2016 is a massive project for the whole of French football. It provides a great opportunity to completely modernise the grounds of our major stadia.

"It gives the whole of football, professional and amateur, a project to aim towards for the decade to come.

"The candidacy which has been made official today cannot only be that of the FFF - it must be that of the whole country."

There had been talk of a joint bid with Italy but FFF president Jean-Pierre Escalettes told L'Equipe: "We are going to go it alone and with the aim of winning."

The last major tournament hosted by France was the 1998 World Cup, which they went on to win.